Re: [PATCH v7 2/5] docs: counter: Update to reflect sysfs internalization
From: Jonathan Cameron
Date: Wed Dec 30 2020 - 09:42:41 EST
On Fri, 25 Dec 2020 19:15:35 -0500
William Breathitt Gray <vilhelm.gray@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> The Counter subsystem architecture and driver implementations have
> changed in order to handle Counter sysfs interactions in a more
> consistent way. This patch updates the Generic Counter interface
> documentation to reflect the changes.
>
> Signed-off-by: William Breathitt Gray <vilhelm.gray@xxxxxxxxx>
> ---
> Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-bus-counter | 9 +-
> Documentation/driver-api/generic-counter.rst | 242 ++++++++++++++-----
> 2 files changed, 184 insertions(+), 67 deletions(-)
>
> diff --git a/Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-bus-counter b/Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-bus-counter
> index 566bd99fe0a5..1820ce2f9183 100644
> --- a/Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-bus-counter
> +++ b/Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-bus-counter
> @@ -219,7 +219,14 @@ What: /sys/bus/counter/devices/counterX/signalY/signal
> KernelVersion: 5.2
> Contact: linux-iio@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Description:
> - Signal data of Signal Y represented as a string.
> + Signal level state of Signal Y. The following signal level
> + states are available:
> +
> + low:
> + Low level state.
> +
> + high:
> + High level state.
>
> What: /sys/bus/counter/devices/counterX/signalY/name
> KernelVersion: 5.2
> diff --git a/Documentation/driver-api/generic-counter.rst b/Documentation/driver-api/generic-counter.rst
> index b02c52cd69d6..b842ddbbd8a0 100644
> --- a/Documentation/driver-api/generic-counter.rst
> +++ b/Documentation/driver-api/generic-counter.rst
> @@ -250,8 +250,8 @@ for defining a counter device.
> .. kernel-doc:: drivers/counter/counter.c
> :export:
>
> -Implementation
> -==============
> +Driver Implementation
> +=====================
>
> To support a counter device, a driver must first allocate the available
> Counter Signals via counter_signal structures. These Signals should
> @@ -267,25 +267,59 @@ respective counter_count structure. These counter_count structures are
> set to the counts array member of an allocated counter_device structure
> before the Counter is registered to the system.
>
> -Driver callbacks should be provided to the counter_device structure via
> -a constant counter_ops structure in order to communicate with the
> -device: to read and write various Signals and Counts, and to set and get
> -the "action mode" and "function mode" for various Synapses and Counts
> -respectively.
> +Driver callbacks must be provided to the counter_device structure in
> +order to communicate with the device: to read and write various Signals
> +and Counts, and to set and get the "action mode" and "function mode" for
> +various Synapses and Counts respectively.
>
> A defined counter_device structure may be registered to the system by
> passing it to the counter_register function, and unregistered by passing
> it to the counter_unregister function. Similarly, the
> -devm_counter_register and devm_counter_unregister functions may be used
> -if device memory-managed registration is desired.
> -
> -Extension sysfs attributes can be created for auxiliary functionality
> -and data by passing in defined counter_device_ext, counter_count_ext,
> -and counter_signal_ext structures. In these cases, the
> -counter_device_ext structure is used for global/miscellaneous exposure
> -and configuration of the respective Counter device, while the
> -counter_count_ext and counter_signal_ext structures allow for auxiliary
> -exposure and configuration of a specific Count or Signal respectively.
> +devm_counter_register function may be used if device memory-managed
> +registration is desired.
> +
> +The struct counter_comp structure is used to define counter extensions
> +for Signals, Synapses, and Counts.
> +
> +The "type" member specifies the type of high-level data (e.g. BOOL,
> +COUNT_DIRECTION, etc.) handled by this extension. The "`*_read`" and
> +"`*_write`" members can then be set by the counter device driver with
> +callbacks to handle that data using native C data types (i.e. u8, u64,
> +etc.).
> +
> +Convenience macros such as `COUNTER_COMP_COUNT_U64` are provided for use
> +by driver authors. In particular, driver authors are expected to use
> +the provided macros for standard Counter subsystem attributes in order
> +to maintain a consistent interface for userspace. For example, a counter
> +device driver may define several standard attributes like so::
> +
> + struct counter_comp count_ext[] = {
> + COUNTER_COMP_DIRECTION(count_direction_read),
> + COUNTER_COMP_ENABLE(count_enable_read, count_enable_write),
> + COUNTER_COMP_CEILING(count_ceiling_read, count_ceiling_write),
> + };
> +
> +This makes it simple to see, add, and modify the attributes that are
> +supported by this driver ("direction", "enable", and "ceiling") and to
> +maintain this code without getting lost in a web of struct braces.
> +
> +Callbacks must match the function type expected for the respective
> +component or extension. These function types are defined in the struct
> +counter_comp structure as the "`*_read`" and "`*_write`" union members.
> +
> +The corresponding callback prototypes for the extensions mentioned in
> +the previous example above would be::
> +
> + int count_direction_read(struct counter_device *counter,
> + struct counter_count *count, u8 *direction);
> + int count_enable_read(struct counter_device *counter,
> + struct counter_count *count, u8 *enable);
> + int count_enable_write(struct counter_device *counter,
> + struct counter_count *count, u8 enable);
> + int count_ceiling_read(struct counter_device *counter,
> + struct counter_count *count, u64 *ceiling);
> + int count_ceiling_write(struct counter_device *counter,
> + struct counter_count *count, u64 ceiling);
>
> Determining the type of extension to create is a matter of scope.
>
> @@ -313,52 +347,128 @@ Determining the type of extension to create is a matter of scope.
> chip overheated via a device extension called "error_overtemp":
> /sys/bus/counter/devices/counterX/error_overtemp
>
> -Architecture
> -============
> -
> -When the Generic Counter interface counter module is loaded, the
> -counter_init function is called which registers a bus_type named
> -"counter" to the system. Subsequently, when the module is unloaded, the
> -counter_exit function is called which unregisters the bus_type named
> -"counter" from the system.
> -
> -Counter devices are registered to the system via the counter_register
> -function, and later removed via the counter_unregister function. The
> -counter_register function establishes a unique ID for the Counter
> -device and creates a respective sysfs directory, where X is the
> -mentioned unique ID:
> -
> - /sys/bus/counter/devices/counterX
> -
> -Sysfs attributes are created within the counterX directory to expose
> -functionality, configurations, and data relating to the Counts, Signals,
> -and Synapses of the Counter device, as well as options and information
> -for the Counter device itself.
> -
> -Each Signal has a directory created to house its relevant sysfs
> -attributes, where Y is the unique ID of the respective Signal:
> -
> - /sys/bus/counter/devices/counterX/signalY
> -
> -Similarly, each Count has a directory created to house its relevant
> -sysfs attributes, where Y is the unique ID of the respective Count:
> -
> - /sys/bus/counter/devices/counterX/countY
> -
> -For a more detailed breakdown of the available Generic Counter interface
> -sysfs attributes, please refer to the
> -Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-bus-counter file.
> -
> -The Signals and Counts associated with the Counter device are registered
> -to the system as well by the counter_register function. The
> -signal_read/signal_write driver callbacks are associated with their
> -respective Signal attributes, while the count_read/count_write and
> -function_get/function_set driver callbacks are associated with their
> -respective Count attributes; similarly, the same is true for the
> -action_get/action_set driver callbacks and their respective Synapse
> -attributes. If a driver callback is left undefined, then the respective
> -read/write permission is left disabled for the relevant attributes.
> -
> -Similarly, extension sysfs attributes are created for the defined
> -counter_device_ext, counter_count_ext, and counter_signal_ext
> -structures that are passed in.
> +Subsystem Architecture
> +======================
> +
> +Counter drivers pass and take data natively (i.e. `u8`, `u64`, etc.) and
> +the shared counter module handles the translation between the sysfs
> +interface.
Same point as raised in previous patch description.
> This gurantees a standard userspace interface for all counter
Spell check this file. guarantees
> +drivers, and helps generalize the Generic Counter driver ABI in order to
> +support the Generic Counter chrdev interface without significant changes
> +to the existing counter drivers.
I would modify this to assume you've already done the chrdev interface.
"and enables a Generic Counter chrdev interface without..."
> +
> +A high-level view of how a count value is passed down from a counter
> +driver is exemplified by the following. The driver callbacks are first
> +registered to the Counter core component for use by the Counter
> +userspace interface components::
> +
> + Driver callbacks registration:
> + ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> + +----------------------------+
> + | Counter device driver |
That tab again ;)
> + +----------------------------+
> + | Processes data from device |
> + +----------------------------+
> + |
> + -------------------
> + / driver callbacks /
> + -------------------
> + |
> + V
> + +----------------------+
> + | Counter core |
> + +----------------------+
> + | Routes device driver |
> + | callbacks to the |
> + | userspace interfaces |
> + +----------------------+
> + |
> + -------------------
> + / driver callbacks /
> + -------------------
> + |
> + +---------------+
> + |
> + V
> + +--------------------+
> + | Counter sysfs |
> + +--------------------+
> + | Translates to the |
> + | standard Counter |
> + | sysfs output |
> + +--------------------+
> +
> +Thereafter, data can be transferred directly between the Counter device
> +driver and Counter userspace interface::
> +
> + Count data request:
> + ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> + ----------------------
> + / Counter device \
> + +----------------------+
> + | Count register: 0x28 |
> + +----------------------+
> + |
> + -----------------
> + / raw count data /
> + -----------------
> + |
> + V
> + +----------------------------+
> + | Counter device driver |
> + +----------------------------+
> + | Processes data from device |
> + |----------------------------|
> + | Type: u64 |
> + | Value: 42 |
> + +----------------------------+
> + |
> + ----------
> + / u64 /
> + ----------
> + |
> + +---------------+
> + |
> + V
> + +--------------------+
> + | Counter sysfs |
> + +--------------------+
> + | Translates to the |
> + | standard Counter |
> + | sysfs output |
> + |--------------------|
> + | Type: const char * |
> + | Value: "42" |
> + +--------------------+
> + |
> + ---------------
> + / const char * /
> + ---------------
> + |
> + V
> + +--------------------------------------------------+
> + | `/sys/bus/counter/devices/counterX/countY/count` |
> + +--------------------------------------------------+
> + \ Count: "42" /
> + --------------------------------------------------
> +
> +There are three primary components involved:
> +
> +Counter device driver
> +---------------------
> +Communicates with the hardware device to read/write data; e.g. counter
> +drivers for quadrature encoders, timers, etc.
> +
> +Counter core
> +------------
> +Registers the counter device driver to the system so that the respective
> +callbacks are called during userspace interaction.
> +
> +Counter sysfs
> +-------------
> +Translates counter data to the standard Counter sysfs interface format
> +and vice versa.
> +
> +Please refer to the `Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-bus-counter` file
> +for a detailed breakdown of the available Generic Counter interface
> +sysfs attributes.
Otherwise LGTM.
Thanks,
Jonathan